... SINGAPORE, March 27 (Reuters) - Southeast Asian stock markets ended higher on Thursday, with further gains ... it said it was still negotiating with Chinas ICBC (1398.HK: ) about the sale of ... steep. In Vietnam, the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange rose on the first day of a ...
Thursday, March 27, 2008
SE Asian Stocks-Higher on gains in financials and oil plays
Ten Network Profit Rises 17% on Advertising Increase at CanWest Business
... 4:10 p.m. market close on the Australian Stock Exchange, extending this years decline to 20 percent. ... second half may be affected by the Beijing Olympic Games, which will be screened on ...
Thomson Financial Europe AM at a glance share guide: Stocks slide; oil rises
... the stress in the housing market. BONDS: Japanese government bond prices ended Thursday morning mostly ... sales stirred worries about the US economy. FOREX: The US dollar slid against the yen ... last week and as stocks fell. EVENTS: Japan weekly capital inflows Hong Kong Feb trade ...
Wednesday, March 26, 2008
ISX index down, closes at 37.550
... Baghdad, 26 March 2008 (Voices of Iraq) -- Iraqs Stock Exchange (ISX) index decreased by 0.661 % to settle at 37.550 points at the closuring ...
Our Share Offer May Rise Above N25 in Second Outing - Daar
... Nigerians woke up on 25th of February this ... Radio stations, has gone to the Nigerian Stock Exchange, NSE to raise N10 billion for expansion ...
FirstAlert tm 3/26: What About Oil Prices?
... 2008 (FinancialWire) (By Dr. Joe Duarte) The stock market seems to have decided that for now ... Menachem Begin and Jimmy Carter signed the Israel-Egypt Peace Treaty in Washington, DC in 1979. ...
Egypts Amreya Cement 2007 net profit up 2 pct
... news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Reuters ...
Stock markets falter, investors discouraged by U.S. durable goods orders
... Stock markets falter, investors discouraged by U.S. durable goods ... durable goods orders TORONTO - The Toronto stock market was down slightly amid higher oil and ... Rio Doce has halted negotiations to acquire Anglo-Swiss miner Xstrata PLC in a deal that ...
BIGresearchs Q1 China Survey: Consumer Confidence of Young Chinese Soars as U.S. Consumer Confidenc
... BIGresearchs Q1 China Survey: Consumer Confidence of Young Chinese Soars as U.S. Consumer Confidence Continues to ... as only 33.2% say the same. The stock market isnt the only market performing well in ...
Cold winter warms natural gas prices
... given the strong demand from Europe and Japan." MacNeill believes oil should continue to trade ... these levels. In all, he says, the equity market has been focused on the deteriorating financial ...
CFS Mk-II to run from April 7
... 2008): The Securities and Exchange Commission of Pakistan (SECP) has announced that the CFS Mk-II ... announced this after a meeting with Karachi Stock Exchange management, directors of KSE, NCCPL management, representatives ...
Tuesday, March 25, 2008
Nigeria: Guinness Emerges Top Stock As Divergent Views Trail SECs Reforms Programmes
... Guinness Nigeria Plc emerged the stock of the week on the Nigerian Stock Exchange (NSE) last week. It achieved this feat by recording the least Price Earnings (PEs) ...
Thomson Financial Europe AM at a glance share guide: Stocks mixed, oil falls
... 98.90 usd -96 cents (Intra-day trade) STOCKS: Stock markets across Asia rallied Tuesday with the Australian ... AGM Fiskars AGM SPAIN Feb producer prices SWITZERLAND UBS Feb KOF consumption indicator tfn.newsdesk@thomson.com ypv/ndi/ans ...
Iraqs stock exchange goes electronic
... 25 March 2008 (Telegraph) -- Iraqs rising prosperity is to be symbolically marked ... week with the inauguration of a new stock exchange system in Baghdad. Baghdad, 24 March 2008 ...
Sasol unveils South Africas biggest empowerment deal
... JOHANNESBURG (Reuters) - Fuels and petrochemicals group Sasol ... to a 2.4 percent rise in the JSE Securities Exchange Top-40 index. Abri du Plessis, Chief Investment ...
Monday, March 24, 2008
CANADIAN MINING PERSPECTIVES: What investors are looking for, M&A activity, and the reshaping of global mining capital markets
... the Americas and Africa. LSE investors prefer Africa, Eastern Europe and the Middle East. Johannesburg Stock Exchange (JSE) investors prefer Africa, and Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) investors prefer the Asia-Pacific region. Superior valuations generally follow these preferences. For the ...
Gold plunges on global trend
Commodity Online MUMBAI: Heavy selling by stockists prompted by global trend saw the yellow metal tumbled by Rs 150 per 10 gram at the bullion market here on Monday.
Japanese, Korean Markets Rise
Asian stock prices mostly rose in light trading Friday after a turbulent week. But trading was light, however, as most markets worldwide were closed for Good Friday.
Saturday, March 22, 2008
BOJ policy board elects Shirakawa as its chairman
TOKYO (Reuters) - The Bank of Japans policy board has elected acting central bank governor Masaaki Shirakawa as its chairman, the BOJ said on Friday.
A tax break thats worth the hassle
The earned income tax credit, available to people who dont make a lot of money, can be complicated. But if you are eligible, the time it takes to file will be well spent.
Why your retirement is probably safe
If youre really rich, the market turmoil of late may threaten your retirement lifestyle. But if youre middle class, the effect is likely to be smaller. Heres why.
Wednesday, March 12, 2008
New arrest in SocGen trading scandal
In January, France's second-biggest listed bank SocGen unveiled 4.9 billion euros ($7.53 billion) of losses which it blamed on rogue deals carried out by Jerome Kerviel, a 31-year old junior trader at the bank.
The losses have made SocGen a possible bid target.
The Paris prosecutor's office identified the latest person being held as a trader from a subsidiary of SocGen.
A source close to the matter said the person being held works for SG Securities, the bank's share brokerage arm.
Societe Generale Says Another Employee Held by Police
The headquarters of France's second-biggest bank in La Defense, just outside Paris, were searched by police today, who took some documents, Societe Generale spokeswoman Laura Schalk said in an interview.
The latest development deepens a probe that began after the bank said in January that 31-year-old trader Jerome Kerviel amassed 50 billion euros in trades backed by fake hedges and false documents. Unwinding his bets resulted in the biggest trading loss in banking history and forced Societe Generale to replenish depleted capital.
``It's normal for the investigation to widen, and we will see where this brings us, given that many people said Kerviel could not have acted alone,'' said Arnaud Scarpaci, who helps manage about $235 million at Agilis Gestion SA in Paris. ``At an image level, it's not the best for the company.''
Societe Generale failed to follow up on 75 warnings on bets by Kerviel, independent board members concluded in a report last month. While the board has twice turned down Chairman Daniel Bouton's offer to resign, the document highlighted the shortcomings of Societe Generale's management supervision that allowed Kerviel to forge documents and emails undetected for more than two years.
Unidentified Broker
The Societe Generale employee taken into custody today is the second broker to be questioned in the Kerviel case. Moussa Bakir, a 32-year-old broker at Newedge, was questioned and released last month. Kerviel passed trades through Societe Generale's Fimat unit, which merged in January with Credit Agricole SA's futures brokerage to form Newedge.
The police are questioning the second broker, Isabelle Montagne, a spokeswoman for Paris prosecutors, said today in a telephone interview. She declined to name the broker. She said the broker was taken into custody mid-morning and would be held for 24 hours. The detention could be extended to up to 48 hours.
Kerviel, who admitted to exceeding his trading limits and faking documents to show his bets were covered by hedges, has been interrogated six times since he was incarcerated on Feb. 8. He has been charged with hacking into the bank's computers, falsifying documents and breach of trust.
Dollar Falls to Record Low on Concern Fed Package Won't Succeed
The U.S. currency erased more than half of yesterday's 1.6 percent rally versus the yen, the biggest in six months, which came after the Fed said it would extend $200 billion of credit to financial institutions to spur lending. Traders bet the Fed will cut rates by as much as three quarters of a percentage point next week to avert a recession, while the European Central Bank keeps borrowing costs unchanged.
``It's difficult for the dollar to gain traction,'' said Paresh Upadhyaya, who helps manage $50 billion in currency assets at Putnam Investments in Boston. ``The Fed is probably running out of options; the market is fixated on interest-rate differentials, which are clearly negative for the dollar.''
The dollar fell to $1.5504 per euro, the weakest since the euro's 1999 debut, and traded at $1.5492 at 10:12 a.m. in New York, from $1.5338 yesterday. The previous historic low was set yesterday. It dropped to 102.32 yen from 103.42, within one yen of an eight-year low. The euro traded at 158.59 yen from 158.61.
Euro gains were limited after Luxembourg Finance Minister Jean-Claude Juncker said he is ``very vigilant'' on the euro in current circumstances and that exchange rates should reflect fundamentals. He spoke to reporters in Brussels.
Gulf Pegs
The yen climbed against major currencies, including a 1.3 percent rally versus South Africa's rand, as a government report showed Japan's economy grew an annualized 3.5 percent last quarter, faster than the 2.3 percent median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News.
Forward contracts to buy United Arab Emirates dirhams rose the most in two weeks after Economy Minister Sultan Bin Saeed Al Mansouri said the dirham's dollar peg is ``contributing'' to record inflation.
A Qatari official denied in a telephone interview that Gulf central bankers will consider dropping the dollar peg when they meet next week. Gulf countries are under pressure to revalue their currencies or drop dollar pegs after the U.S. currency fell 10 percent against the euro last year and the Fed cut rates. The weaker dollar boosts the cost of imports from Europe, while Gulf states have to follow rate cuts, stoking inflation.
The euro extended its gains against the dollar earlier after a European Union report showed industrial production in the region increased for the first time in three months in January. It rose 0.9 percent from the prior month, more than twice the rate forecast by economists surveyed by Bloomberg.
`Stay Short Dollars'
The euro also rose on speculation ECB President Jean-Claude Trichet will highlight inflation risks today at a press conference. ECB council member Axel Weber yesterday said that he sees ``no room'' to lower rates.
The ECB's main rate is 1 percentage point above the Fed's 3 percent target rate for overnight loans between banks.
Policy makers in the U.S., U.K., Canada, Switzerland and the euro region agreed yesterday on a second round of emergency- loans to curb rising money-market rates. The Fed said it will lend Treasuries through a new lending tool and widen the collateral it accepts to include mortgage-backed securities.
Monday, March 10, 2008
Blackstone says tough conditions hit results
Under a measure known as economic net income (ENI), Blackstone earned a fourth-quarter profit of $128.2 million, or 8 cents a share, compared with a pro forma adjusted figure of $894.9 million, or 72 cents, a year ago.
Analysts polled by Reuters had expected it to report 16 cents a share.
"Lack of available financing in the U.S. and Europe for large leveraged transactions limited our transaction fees," Blackstone's Chairman and Chief Executive Stephen Schwarzman said in a statement. "Difficult market conditions in the U.S. and Europe continue in 2008 and there is little visibility on when these conditions might improve."
The company cited decreases in the value of Blackstone's portfolio investment in Financial Guaranty Insurance Company, which was hit by turmoil in the credit markets, and lower net appreciation of portfolio investments in other sectors as compared with the prior year.
ENI is net income excluding income taxes, noncash charges related to vesting of equity-based compensation and amortization of intangible assets. Blackstone prefers to focus on ENI because of the huge payouts associated with its more than $4 billion initial public offering in June.
McDonald's February Sales Increase 12%, Led by Europe
The stock rose the most in more than a month in New York trading.
Sales at U.S. outlets open more than 13 months rose 8.3 percent, the Oak Brook, Illinois-based company said today in a statement. Comparable-store sales in Europe advanced 15 percent while gaining 11 percent in the region encompassing Asia, the Middle East and Africa. Last month's extra day for the leap year added 4 percentage points to worldwide same-store sales.
Specialty burger and chicken sandwiches spurred sales in Europe, McDonald's largest region by revenue, while breakfast boosted sales in China and longer hours helped out in Australia. In the U.S., a McSkillet breakfast burrito promotion and dollar- menu advertising lured consumers pinched by declining home values and higher fuel prices.
``McDonald's put up another remarkably strong result in Europe,'' Jason West, an analyst at Deutsche Bank Securities, wrote in a note today. The U.S. results suggest ``McDonald's is not losing share to U.S. competitors as some may have feared.''
McDonald's climbed $1.79, or 3.4 percent, to $54.06 at 10:14 a.m. in New York Stock Exchange composite trading, the biggest increase since Jan. 31. The stock dropped 11 percent this year through last week after rising in each of the past five years.
Oil Rises to Record $107 as Returns Outpace Financial Markets
Oil in New York has surged 77 percent over the past year as the S&P 500 and Dow averages dropped. Hedge-fund managers and other large speculators increased net-long positions, or bets on higher oil prices, in the week ended March 4, a Commodity Futures Trading Commission report showed.
``We're witnessing an ongoing flow of fund buying, which isn't particularly motivated by the particulars of the petroleum market,'' said Tim Evans, an energy analyst at Citigroup Global Markets Inc. in New York. ``Prices have rallied to such an extent where sellers have backed off. Any time prices go lower the buyers come right back into the market.''
Thursday, March 6, 2008
Billionaire dreamlist: helipad and private beach
More billionaire house hunters than ever are scouring the globe in search of the perfect hideaway.
So how about a Parisian mansion with its own ballroom, a forest-fringed estate in Andalusia complete with helipad or maybe a villa in Anguilla with a "feather-topped beach lapped by deep turquoise waters."
Reveling in the purple prose so beloved by estate agents, the glossy magazine Country Life has picked five of the top properties on the market that even the super-rich dream about.
For $95 million, why not snap up Hillandale, an English country-style estate just 50 miles from Manhattan.
Just four minute's drive from the billionaire's playground of Monaco you could put in a bid for the Domain, a Cote d'Azur mansion with its own stud farm, paddocks and dressage arena.
Wal-Mart February same-store sales up 2.6 pct
European Stocks, U.S. Index Futures Decline; Asian Shares Rise
UBS AG sank to the lowest since 2003 after JPMorgan Chase & Co. said Europe's biggest bank probably sold $24 billion in holdings of mortgage-backed securities in a ``fire sale.'' Aegon NV, the second-largest Dutch insurer, lost the most in three weeks on a 26 percent drop in earnings. British Airways Plc had its steepest decline in a week, saying its profit margin will drop.
A rally in mining companies helped Asian stocks rise for the first time in six days, while U.S. index futures fell before a report that will probably show contracts to buy previously owned homes slipped in January for a third month.
``News from the financial industry brings a negative wind,'' said Laurent Vallee, who helps oversee $6.1 billion at Richelieu Finance in Paris. ``We remain cautious on financial stocks.''
Europe's Dow Jones Stoxx 600 Index lost 0.3 percent to 314.62 as of 12:45 p.m. in London. Futures on the Standard & Poor's 500 Index slipped 0.5 percent, while the MSCI Asia Pacific Index added 1.8 percent.
Stocks maintained their losses after the European Central Bank left its key interest rate unchanged. ECB President Jean- Claude Trichet is scheduled to brief reporters at 2:30 p.m. Frankfurt time. The Bank of England earlier kept its benchmark rate on hold.
The Stoxx 600 has lost 14 percent this year on concern the collapse of subprime mortgages and a slowdown in the U.S. economy will curb profit growth in Europe. UBS may have writedowns of about $18 billion after unloading 25 billion Swiss francs of mortgage-backed securities, according to JPMorgan.
Money Markets
Carlyle Capital Corp., which invests in AAA rated mortgage securities, failed to meet margin calls and said today it received a notice of default, while Thornburg Mortgage Inc., a U.S. specialist in adjustable-rate loans too big to be sold to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, also received a default notice on a $320 million loan.
The cost of borrowing euros for three months rose to the highest level in seven weeks, fueling concern a coordinated effort by central banks to limit the fallout from the U.S. housing slump and revive lending is faltering.
Tuesday, March 4, 2008
MGIC Plans Stock Sale to Bolster Mortgage Insurance
Part of the money raised will be used to boost sales, the Milwaukee-based company said late yesterday in a statement. MGIC plans to decide on the size of the stock offering by ``mid to late March,'' and the company may consider other ways of raising capital, it said.
MGIC needs to raise capital to avoid a downgrade of its claims-paying ability after a record fourth-quarter loss of $1.47 billion, Fitch Ratings said Feb. 25. The insurer said Feb. 13 it hired an adviser to help raise money.
Bernanke Urges Banks to Forgive Portion of Mortgages
``Efforts by both government and private-sector entities to reduce unnecessary foreclosures are helping, but more can, and should, be done,'' Bernanke said in a speech in Orlando, Florida today. ``Principal reductions that restore some equity for the homeowner may be a relatively more effective means of avoiding delinquency and foreclosure.''
Bernanke's call goes beyond the stance of the Bush administration and previous Fed comments. By comparison, the central bank's Feb. 27 report to Congress called for lenders to ``pursue prudent loan workouts'' through means such as modifying mortgage terms and deferring payments.
``Delinquencies and foreclosures likely will continue to rise for a while longer,'' Bernanke said in the comments to the Independent Community Bankers of America. ``Supply-demand imbalances in many housing markets suggest that some further declines in house prices are likely.''
Subprime borrowers are about to see their mortgage rates increase more than 1 percentage point, he said. ``Declines in short-term interest rates and initiatives involving rate freezes will reduce the impact somewhat, but interest-rate resets will nevertheless impose stress on many households.''
`Vigorous Response'
In the past, homeowners could refinance, though that option is now ``largely'' gone because sales of bonds backed by subprime mortgages ``have virtually halted,'' Bernanke said. ``This situation calls for a vigorous response.''
Bernanke didn't comment in his speech text on the outlook for the economy or interest rates. Traders expect the Federal Open Market Committee to lower the benchmark rate by 0.75 percentage point by or at the panel's next meeting on March 18, based on futures prices.
Bernanke signaled in congressional testimony last week that the Fed is prepared to lower rates again even amid signs of accelerating inflation.
Yesterday, the Fed and other regulators sent letters to institutions they supervise, encouraging the banks to report on their efforts to modify mortgages at risk of default.
``This will make it easier for regulators, the mortgage industry, lawmakers and homeowners to assess the effectiveness of these efforts,'' Fed Governor Randall Kroszner said in a statement yesterday.
Foreclosures Climb
The number of U.S. homeowners entering foreclosure rose 75 percent in 2007, with more than 1 percent in some stage of foreclosure during the year, according to RealtyTrac Inc. of Irvine, California. For the year, more than 2.2 million default notices, auction notices and bank repossessions were reported on about 1.3 million properties.
``Lenders tell us that they are reluctant to write down principal,'' Bernanke said. ``They say that if they were to write down the principal and house prices were to fall further, they could feel pressured to write down principal again.''
The Fed chairman countered that by reducing the amount of the loan, this ``may increase the expected payoff by reducing the risk of default and foreclosure.''